Bolivia – after the
uprising
THE MASS protest
movements against neo-liberal policies that swept
Bolivia with strikes and demos have ousted president
Carlos Mesa. Roadblocks on 80% of Bolivia’s roads cut
off the capital La Paz and three other major cities. In
several places protesters occupied oil wells.
Marcus Kollbrunner
The movement’s main demand
is nationalisation of the oil and gas sector - to expel
multinational oil and gas companies like Repsol (Spanish),
Total (French), British Gas and British Petroleum
(British), Petrobras (Brazilian), Enron (US), Shell
(Dutch/British) that control around $100 billion-worth of
oil and gas resources.
Poverty hits two-thirds of
the population, and an even bigger proportion of the
indigenous people who are 65% of the population. Many
movements demand a new government of workers and peasants
and a break with neoliberal capitalism.
The new president, Eduardo
Rodriguez, may have reached a truce agreement with COB
(Bolivia’s militant trade union organisation) and Fejuve
(Federation of Neighbourhood Associations - that organises
poor city dwellers in El Alto, La Paz’s poor neighbour)
but Bolivia’s ruling class is far from in control of the
situation.
The movement of miners,
coca growers, peasants, indigenous groups, teachers etc,
has shown willing to fight again and again. If the new
government takes no steps towards nationalising the oil
and gas sector the movement can resume. Few trust the
corrupt political system.
For hundreds of years
Bolivia’s riches have been robbed by foreign powers,
helped by a small domestic elite. But the experience of
privatisation has sharpened awareness of the injustices.
Bolivia today has Latin America’s biggest natural gas
reserves outside of Venezuela. These resources are
estimated to be worth $100 billion - 12 times the
country’s GDP.
Lowering the royalty (tax)
on exploitation of gas and oil (from 50% to 18%) and
privatising the state oil company were central to the
neo-liberal policies implemented in the 1990s.
Exploitation of gas and oil became extremely cheap and
gave big profits for foreign companies - but nothing came
to the poor masses of the country.
In 2003 President Sanchez
de Lozada was ousted after just 14 months for his plans to
export gas to the USA. His vice-president, Mesa, assumed
the presidency. He promised a referendum about
nationalisation of gas and oil, action against corruption
and a constituent assembly.
The ambiguous referendum
led to the new “carbon-hydrate law”, with a new tax on oil
and gas extraction that would give very little new tax
income. Resources would still be in the international oil
and gas giants’ hands. This led to mass protests in March
2005.
Although there were still
widespread demands for nationalisation, the debate focused
for some weeks on taxation of oil and gas. Many saw
increased taxation as a step towards nationalisation.
The MAS (Movement Towards
Socialism), led by Evo Morales demanded that the tax
should be 50%. The mass movement forced congress to adopt
the new tax on a level close to MAS’ demand. Increasingly
isolated, Mesa announced his resignation twice, but that
was not accepted by the congress.
President resigns
AFTER A pause, the
movements came back even stronger - not satisfied with the
new tax, they built new roadblocks. On 23 May, hundreds of
La Paz teachers joined the roadblocks. They struck for
higher wages but also joined the struggle to nationalise
the gas and oil industry.
The same day, a new general
strike was declared in El Alto. A 48-hour transport
strike, demanding nationalisation and a constituent
assembly, brought La Paz to a standstill.
On 31 May, 40,000
protesters prevented the parliament restarting their
negotiations, occupying Plaza Murillo outside the
congress. COB threatened to burn down the congress
building if parliament didn’t vote to nationalise. The
protests continued even after that.
Then on 2 June, Mesa
announced there would be an election to a constituent
assembly and a referendum on greater autonomy for the
provinces on 16 October. But even if the movements wanted
a constituent assembly, they saw this as a manoeuvre to
divert attention from the nationalisation issue.
The autonomy referendum was
a concession to the right, especially the rich elite of
Santa Cruz, the richest province. The elite however don’t
want to be forced to make concessions to the poor
highlands of western Bolivia.
Mesa was left without
support and announced his resignation on 6 June.
Parliament accepted his resignation, although they had to
meet in Sucre because of the mass protests. Hundreds of
thousands took part in the movement at that stage -
Bolivia was really on the edge.
The movements feared that
the speaker of the senate, Hormando Vaca Diez, would claim
the presidency and use the army to clamp down on the
movement, possibly leading to a civil war. Under the
constitution, Vaca Díez would be able to be president for
the rest of Lozada’s original mandate (until 2007).
But most of the ruling
class instead supported the position of MAS and the
Catholic Church, to let the president of the Supreme
Court, Eduardo Rodriguez, assume power on 9 June.
Rodriguez wants to make constitutional changes to allow
new parliamentary elections to be called, not only
elections to president and vice-president. He also wants
to call a constituent assembly and the referendum on
autonomy.
He invited the COB and
Fejuve leaders for negotiations in the government
building, but they refused. Instead, the meeting was held
in El Alto, with live broadcasting and translation into
indigenous languages. COB and Fejuve spoke of giving the
new president a few days of truce to nationalise oil and
gas.
COB leader Jaime Solares
dismissed the new president as a new pawn of the US
embassy. But at the negotiations they agreed to join
commissions to discuss nationalisation and a new
constitution. They also agreed to lift the roadblocks and
to allow supplies into the cities.
Protesters also ended the
occupation of seven Repsol and BP oil wells in eastern
Bolivia and of Enron/Shell’s pumping station, which had
cut off the export of oil to Chile. But protests are still
going on, even if on a smaller scale. The new president’s
tactic is to try and buy time, while giving no promises.
Dual power
THIS YEAR’S movements show
two different trends. Morales’ MAS has been holding back
the protests. MAS was originally based on the movements of
coca growers and Morales was only 45,000 votes short of
beating Lozada in the 2002 presidential elections.
MAS took part in the
current protests but, under the influence of Lula’s PT
party in Brazil, it took a more “moderate” stance.
After Lozada’s resignation
in 2003 Morales gave support to Mesa, which led to his
expulsion from the COB. It was only after all the pressure
of the movement that he supported Mesa’s resignation and
the demand for nationalisation. Morales’ strategy is to
guarantee his election in 2007. He stresses a
“constitutional way out of the crisis”, rather than that
the movements should take control.
Other movements, like COB,
Fejuve, the miners’ union and the teachers’ union in La
Paz, not only demand nationalisation of oil and gas, but
also the closure of parliament. Instead COB and Fejuve
called for the building of a “Popular Assembly” in a mass
meeting with 400,000 participants on 6 June.
On that day the COB
leadership decided to set up a “Peoples’ Revolutionary
Command”, with the task of gathering unions, popular
movements, political and student organisations around the
“strategy of power to the workers, peasants and
impoverished middle-class layers”. But this strategy still
needs to take on flesh and blood.
There are elements of dual
power (where an alternative power structure competes with
the established power), especially in El Alto, but also
parts of La Paz, where local committees have organised
food and fuel supplies during the blockage.
It is right to call for the
setting up of local assemblies with representatives of the
different movements, and for those to be linked up in a
national assembly.
The assemblies must be
built on unity around a socialist programme. We call for
the formation of a workers’ and peasants’ government that
would nationalise oil and gas, the banks and other major
companies, which would be subjected to the democratic
control and management of the working class and its
allies.
The assemblies’ delegates
must be subject to recall and have no privileges, to avoid
a new bureaucracy building up.
The movement must also have
a strategy for dealing with the armed forces. The army
have been reluctant to step into the conflict, but that
can change if the capitalist system is under threat.
Soldiers’ committees must
also be set up, demanding democratisation of the army,
with the election of officers. The assemblies must
organise self-defence, something that COB has raised.
What has been lacking to
bring the movement together around a revolutionary
socialist programme is a mass socialist party with clear
strategy, perspectives and programme.
This movement must spread
the revolution to other countries, particularly in Latin
America. The building of such a party is a central task
for socialists in Bolivia.
A fuller version of this
article can be found on www.socialistworld.net
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